4.7 Article

Native fauna interact differently with native and alien trees in a tropical megacity

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 868, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161683

Keywords

Alien species; Megacity; Pollination; Species interactions; Tropical ecology; Urban ecology; Vertebrate pollinators

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The negative effects of invasive alien plants on natural ecosystems are well known, but in rapidly growing cities, they can provide resources for native fauna. Previous studies mainly focused on invertebrate pollinators in temperate cities, while this study investigates the interactions between native diurnal birds and mammals with native and alien trees in Bengaluru, India. The results suggest that alien trees can be an important resource for fauna in expanding urban areas, but nectar theft by birds could reduce the seed set of alien trees.
The negative effects of invasive alien plant species on natural ecosystems are well known. However, in rapidly growing cities, alien plants can provide native fauna with resources otherwise lost due to the biotic homogenization, which is common to urban ecosystems. Interactions of native fauna with alien flora have thus far focused largely on invertebrate pollinators in temperate cities in the northern hemisphere. Cities in tropical areas, however, are larger and are growing more rapidly, and host a variety of vertebrate pollinators. Understanding how birds and mammals interact with native and alien flora in these megacities could improve management of urban ecosystems in highly biodiverse regions while limiting invasion potential. Therefore, here we investigate whether native diurnal birds and mammals interact differ-ently with native versus alien trees in Bengaluru, India where historical planting has led to an abundance of alien tree species. We find that tree origin alone was not an important predictor for bird species richness and abundance, but taller native trees with large floral display sizes were more species rich than alien trees of similar floral displays. As expected from their shared evolutionary history, nectarivorous birds fed from native trees more often in a manner that could facilitate pollination, but engaged in nectar theft more often with alien trees. Squirrels (the mammal ob-served most frequently to interact with flowers) were more likely, however, to depredate flowers of native trees. Our results suggest alien trees can be an important resource for fauna in expanding urban areas, and that nectar theft by birds could reduce the seed set of alien trees.

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